Plastow, J (2018) Fear & Trepidation in Asmara: Meeting Ngũgĩ. In: Gikandi, S and Wachanga, N, (eds.) Ngugi: Reflections on his Life of Writing. Boydell & Brewer , London, UK , pp. 91-96. ISBN 9781847012142
Abstract
When I first met Ngũgĩ in January 2000, in Africa's most beautiful capital city of Asmara, Eritrea, he had long been for me a beneficent but slightly terrifying haunting. Given that the core of my academic research has been on East African theatre I could hardly avoid making Ngũgĩ's work in Kamĩrĩĩthũ a central point of reference. When I began working in the late 1980s for a PhD on political theatre in Africa – from a position of considerable ignorance – I remember Martin Banham, the then font of all wisdom on African theatre in England, most kindly telling me that I really should read Ngũgĩ's Decolonising the Mind. I can no longer recollect the order, but over the following years, I would read the novels, the plays and much of the polemic, and then begin to teach them; engaging with the restless intelligence that constantly sought new forms to express ever more accurately the history of the multiple on-going oppressions of the African everyman, by both black and white, of the capitalist, Christian establishment. I was also humbled by knowledge of the price Ngũgĩ had paid for his integrity, from the minor loss of western critical approbation when he turned his back on the well-made novel, to the major traumas of imprisonment without trial, enforced exile and the abuse of members of his family.
When I went to the University of Leeds in 1994 to teach in the Workshop Theatre of the School of English, I found Ngũgĩ had preceded me, having enrolled a couple of decades earlier on an MA he never completed because he had been preoccupied with finishing the novel A Grain of Wheat. He was beneficent because I agreed so strongly with much, though not all, of his political analysis, and because he wrote and engaged with life and people with such artistry and passion. He was slightly terrifying because of all the opprobrium he poured on white people working in Africa and on the comfortable middleclasses. I was undeniably a member of both groups.
What I could not have then known was that at the same time I was reading Ngũgĩ he was also becoming a favourite author of an Eritrean freedom fighter named Alemseged Tesfai, a tegadalai (freedom fighter) living in the northern mountains on little more than bread and lentils.
Metadata
Item Type: | Book Section |
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Authors/Creators: |
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Dates: |
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Institution: | The University of Leeds |
Academic Units: | The University of Leeds > Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Cultures (Leeds) > School of English (Leeds) |
Depositing User: | Symplectic Publications |
Date Deposited: | 14 Aug 2018 15:40 |
Last Modified: | 19 Sep 2019 08:05 |
Status: | Published |
Publisher: | Boydell & Brewer |
Identification Number: | 10.1017/9781787443853.021 |
Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:eprints.whiterose.ac.uk:133021 |